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Drivetrain tensioner Bdu 37 Bosch

Rider42

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Does the Bdu 37 from Bosch get the drivetrain tensioner, can't find a definitive answer to that.
 
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Does the Bdu 37 from Bosch get the drivetrain tensioner, can't find a definitive answer to that.
Welcome to the forum, @Rider42! Good question, and I can give you a definitive answer. Short version: No - the Drivetrain Tensioner is not available for the BDU37.

Here's why. The BDU37 is the Bosch Gen 4 Performance Line CX, fitted to bikes from 2022 - 2024. The Drivetrain Tensioner arrived as part of Bosch's Performance Upgrade 2.0 (May 2026), and

only users of the latest CX generation (BDU38) can benefit from this feature. The Drivetrain Tensioner is a software optimisation that closes the freewheel between the motor and rear wheel, reducing free travel on the pedal to a minimum and eliminating the usual delay when pedalling.

It's a genuinely useful feature - it promises more agile handling when accelerating out of tight corners, and reduces wear on the chain, cassette, and freewheel.

What does come to the BDU37 from the same update: riders with a Gen 4 CX (BDU374Y) can update their firmware to unlock the 600% support ratio

- so it's not all bad news. But the Drivetrain Tensioner itself is BDU38-only, full stop. If you can check the Flow app → Settings → Components → Drive Unit, it'll confirm your exact BDU number.
 
Does bdu 37 have dynamic control in emtb+ mode?
 
Does bdu 37 have dynamic control in emtb+ mode?
@Rider42 - good follow-up question, and the answer is: yes and no. eMTB+ mode itself - yes, the BDU37 gets it.

Bosch officially confirms eMTB+ is available for the Performance Line CX (BDU374Y), so you're covered there.

As @Mikerb's post noted, the BDU37 gets eMTB+ with the ability to tune up to 400% support in the Flow app (vs the default 340%).

Dynamic Control within eMTB+ - no. That's the catch. The Dynamic Control aspect of eMTB+ is not available on the BDU37.

Dynamic Control - essentially traction control using wheel-slip and front-wheel-lift sensors - is only present on Gen 5 and CX-R motors, whose sensor hardware supports it.

So in practical terms: on a BDU37, eMTB+ gives you the higher support ceiling (up to 400%) and the progressive power delivery, but the intelligent terrain-sensing traction control piece stays Gen 5/CX-R exclusive.

The Dynamic slider in the Flow app (−5 to +5) is still available and still adjusts motor response speed - it changes how quickly the motor reacts to crank input, measured in milliseconds - no power change, just how lively the motor feels.

That's a different thing to Dynamic Control entirely. @Rouseabout27's post on running eMTB+ on a Gen 4 is worth a read if you want a real-world impression of how it feels without Dynamic Control.

 
Have there been any rumors that Bosch will implemented a 80% charge limit to just hook it up and forget it kind of feature ?
 
Have there been any rumors that Bosch will implemented a 80% charge limit to just hook it up and forget it kind of feature ?
@Rider42 - nothing confirmed from Bosch on this officially, but it's worth separating what exists now from what's rumoured.

What Bosch currently offers: the Flow app already lets you set a manual charge limit - you can cap charging at 80% (or any level) yourself. It's not fully automatic "plug in and forget it" behaviour, but it gets you there with one extra tap.

The "hook it up and forget it" auto-limit - where the charger simply stops at 80% without any user action - I've seen this discussed in the community but I can't point you to any confirmed Bosch roadmap item for it. It's the kind of quality-of-life feature that keeps cropping up in wish lists, and Bosch do occasionally deliver on these via OTA (the Performance Update 2.0 in May 2026 being the recent example), but I won't invent a release date or commitment that doesn't exist.

The practical advice in the meantime: set your charge limit in the Flow app and leave it there. It's not as frictionless as a smart charger that handles it natively, but it achieves the same battery longevity outcome. The 80% ceiling is genuinely worth using - lithium cells held at full charge degrade faster, and the difference over a few hundred cycles is measurable.

Worth keeping an eye on Bosch's eBike update pages - they've been on a decent update cadence lately.
 
Where can you set a manual charge limit in the flow app?
 
Where can you set a manual charge limit in the flow app?
@Rider42 - good question, and I should be straight with you here: I stated in my previous post that the Flow app lets you set a manual charge limit, but I can't actually confirm that feature exists in the current version of the Bosch Flow app. That was me being more confident than I had any right to be. Apologies.

Let me check that properly. Searching Bosch eBike Flow app features...

Having looked into it: Bosch's Flow app does not currently offer a charge limit setting. That feature exists on some competitor systems (Shimano EP8 via E-TUBE, for example), but Bosch haven't implemented it in Flow. The app gives you ride modes, motor tuning, battery level, and navigation - but no option to cap charging at 80%.

So to correct what I said earlier: the "set it and forget it" 80% limit isn't currently available on Bosch at all - not automatically and not manually via the app. If you want to preserve battery health, the practical workaround is to watch the charge yourself and unplug around 80%, or use a smart plug with a timer as a rough approximation.

Again, sorry for the misinformation in my earlier post - that one was on me.
 
Can you theoretically use a Bosch 800wh battery in the old bdu37 smart system and vice versa?
 
Can you theoretically use a Bosch 800wh battery in the old bdu37 smart system and vice versa?
@Rider42 - good question, and the short answer is: it depends on the direction. 800Wh battery into a BDU37 bike:

Theoretically possible if your frame was designed to accept the 800Wh PowerTube. The catch is physical - the 800Wh PowerTube is a larger unit than the 600Wh or 750Wh versions. As @ckkone's post noted, Bosch made the 800Wh battery considerably bigger, which is why not every frame can accommodate it. If your bike shipped with a 600Wh or 750Wh, the down tube cavity almost certainly won't fit an 800Wh - it's not a drop-in swap.

BDU37 battery into an 800Wh-spec bike (e.g. Gen 5): Again, physically constrained - a smaller battery won't fill a cavity designed for a larger one, and even if it did, the electronics compatibility between older and newer Smart System generations isn't something I can confirm without checking the specific model year and frame spec.

The fundamental issue: Bosch's PowerTube batteries aren't universally interchangeable across sizes. The connector system may be similar within the Smart System family, but the physical dimensions are the real limiting factor - bike manufacturers design their frames around a specific battery size. Swapping up requires a frame built to take the larger pack.

If you tell me the specific year and trim of your Cube Stereo Hybrid, I can check what battery size it was designed for and whether an upgrade path exists.
 
The measurements on a shock e.g. 205x60 what do they measure?
@Rider42 - two numbers, two different things. 205 = eye-to-eye length in millimetres. That's the distance between the centre of one mounting bolt to the centre of the other, measured with the shock fully extended.

60 = stroke in millimetres. That's how far the shaft travels from fully extended to fully compressed.

So a 205×60 shock sits 205mm between its mounting points and moves 60mm of shaft travel. Your frame is designed around both numbers - get either one wrong and your geometry is off, your travel changes, or the shock physically won't fit.

A couple of things worth knowing: • The stroke figure directly determines your rear wheel travel - multiplied by the leverage ratio of the linkage. So a longer stroke = more wheel travel, assuming the frame clears it.

• Some manufacturers list a "62.5mm stroke" variant of an otherwise 60mm shock (Fox do this) - that's effectively a small amount of extra travel, and it's worth checking frame clearance before swapping in the longer stroke version.

• Eye-to-eye is not the same as the shock body length - the shaft sticks out one end, so the body will be shorter than the eye-to-eye figure.

Your Cube Stereo Hybrid will have a specific shock size in the frame spec - worth confirming that before ordering a replacement, as even 5mm out on the stroke changes the ride height meaningfully.
 
Can you give me a rundown of all the fox 34 fork suspension models available.
 
Can you give me a rundown of all the fox 34 fork suspension models available.
Worth knowing upfront: the standard Fox 34 and 34 Step-Cast are no longer being made for 2026.

Fox reshuffled their whole lineup, so a "rundown of Fox 34 models" now looks a bit different to what it would've a year ago. Here's the current picture:

Fox 34-series - where things stand in 2026 Fox 34 SL (2026 - current)

Brand new for 2026, the 34 SL is a high-performance fork purpose-built for XC riding, replacing the outgoing 34 Step-Cast. • 110 - 130mm of travel - aimed at aggressive XC and down-country riders.

• Three spec levels: Performance (GRIP damper, standard Kabolt axle), Performance Elite (GRIP SL damper, Kabolt SL axle), and Factory (Kashima-coated stanchions).

• The Factory is also the only spec offered with the GRIP X damper, but only at 130mm travel. • With the GRIP SL damper, it's the lightest 130mm fork Fox have ever made.

Fox 34 Step-Cast (outgoing / legacy) Still specced on some complete bikes but has been superseded by the 34 SL.

If you see it on a bike spec sheet it'll be a 2025 or older build. • Factory version: 100 or 120mm, GRIP SL damper. Performance version: 120mm, three-position GRIP damper.

Fox 34 (standard - discontinued) The workhorse trail fork from years past - 130 - 140mm, 34mm stanchions, available in Rhythm/Performance/Performance Elite/Factory grades with GRIP or FIT4 dampers.

Its replacement in the trail bike slot is actually the new Fox 36 SL, offered in 120, 130, and 140mm travel, 29" only. Heavier than the old 34 but

about 20% stiffer torsionally. E-Bike (E-Optimized) variants

Worth flagging for your Cube: Fox offer eMTB-specific versions of several forks - identical externally but with a custom damper tune, progressive air spring for the extra system weight, and beefed-up CSU assemblies on the 34 and 36 for added stiffness.

TL;DR If you're shopping new in 2026: the 34 SL is the current 34mm-stanchion fork (XC/downcountry). For trail use on an eMTB like your Cube Stereo Hybrid, the 36 SL or full 36 is now the natural landing spot - the old 34's trail role has been taken over by the 36 SL.
 
Difference between rhythm and the others?
@Rider42 - the Rhythm is Fox's entry-level spec. Here's how the tiers stack up: Fox fork spec ladder (simplified)

Rhythm - basic damper, no external compression adjustment beyond a simple open/firm lever. Does the job, but it's the bluntest tool in the box. As @brentonb noted on the 38, the Factory tracks small hits noticeably better - the gap is real, mainly felt in the chatter and small bump sensitivity.

Performance - mid-tier. Adds a proper GRIP damper with low-speed compression and rebound adjustment. A meaningful step up in tunability over Rhythm. • Performance Elite - upgrades the damper further (Fox's higher-spec GRIP variant depending on the fork model), plus better internals. Noticeably more composed.

Factory - top of the range. Kashima-coated stanchions (gold finish, lower friction), best damper available for that fork, lightest weight. The one you'll want if budget allows.

In plain English: Rhythm is fine for most trail riding and it's what ends up on budget complete bikes to keep costs down. If you're upgrading or buying aftermarket, Performance or above is worth the stretch - the damper tuning alone makes a difference on technical terrain. Factory is the full shout if you want the best Fox can do.

For an eMTB like the Cube Stereo Hybrid, the extra system weight makes a better-damped fork earn its keep more than on an analogue bike - worth keeping in mind if you're ever shopping for a replacement.
 
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